Idea in Brief

The Situation

After decades of relative calm, macroeconomic shocks and crises are dominating headlines and complicating corporate strategy. Unfortunately, the field of macroeconomics is of little help. If anything, it has contributed to the problem, by inviting knee-jerk and too-confident reactions to volatile dataflow.

Why It Persists

No economic model succeeded in predicting the shocks of the past five years while avoiding the false alarms. Models and their forecasts are least reliable when they are most needed: in times of crisis. But when the economy is in free fall, executives are understandably desperate for guidance as to what might happen next.

The Solution

In this article the authors outline how leaders can cultivate their judgment—and use it to see past negative headlines, to draw on diverse sources, to identify key causal narratives, and ultimately to make better calls.

A version of this article appeared in the July–August 2024 issue of Harvard Business Review.